Lent
2019: A Wintry Journey
COMMENTARY:
Winter is here. It’s a colder, deeper winter for the Church than we’ve
experienced in a long time.
One
purpose of liturgical prayer in the Church is the sanctification of time. The
movement of the day is sanctified in the Liturgy of the Hours: Morning Prayer
to praise God for another day, Evening Prayer to place ourselves under God’s
mantle as darkness falls; each time of prayer has its meaning, and each follows
the rhythm and cycle of life. Predictable, to be sure, but each day has its
unique moments of light and darkness. On a larger scale, the same is true of
the liturgical year. The Church honours the dignity of creation by offering
reverence to the changing of the seasons and finding God’s grace in the change.
As a
season, Lent universally falls in the ’tween that bridges winter and spring (at
least in the Northern Hemisphere). That fact may be true every year, but no two
Lents are alike: It isn’t that the prayers and the celebrations change, but we
do. As winter moves toward spring each year, we turn inward to see by the light
of grace what has changed within, just as the seasons have changed around us.
Foreheads
stained by ashes, knees stressed by the Way of the Cross, stomachs brought to
growling by fasting — all of these mark the typical Lent.
But this
year is not a typical Lent.
Winter is
here.
Fingers
are quick to point, tongues are quick to wag, and words are quick to turn to
vitriol. It’s a colder, deeper winter for the Church than we’ve experienced in
a long time.
Everywhere
we turn we see suffering within and without the Church, like the scattered
detritus of fallen leaves. The stolen innocence of children worldwide who
trusted their priests. The fearful discouragement of priests and people who
trusted their bishops. The fallen purity of the priesthood and episcopacy and
widespread ennui in every diocese. More new “nones” than nuns. Bombs in churches.
The persecution of faithful Catholics who want to serve both God and country:
When did it become an insult to note, “The dogma lives loudly within you?” The
scandalous hypocrisy of officials who are “personally opposed, but …”
In this
long winter, faith-filled, churchgoing people of every ilk are compelled to
worship at altars set up by public ideologies: Abortion “rights” and non-binary
gender alternatives voraciously consume our liberties. The world was aghast
when ISIS blew up monuments of religions other than its own, but the same world
watches silently as the proselytizers of so-called progress do the same with
deeply held tenets of any faith that dissents from the hedonistic dogma of
today. The apostles of tolerance allow no alternatives. What was, a generation
ago, right and just, even virtuous, is now labeled bigotry and hate speech.
Giving up
chocolate seems so trifling this Lent. No, this is a Lent to enter deeply into
the heart of Jesus. The Catechism of the Catholic Church reminds us, “By the
solemn 40 days of Lent the Church unites herself each year to the mystery of
Jesus in the desert” (540). However, in today’s long Lent of the Church, it is
critical to recall that it was the Holy Spirit who led Jesus into the desert,
as it had been the Father who led the Hebrews into the desert long before. God
has not stopped leading us into the desert. There’s a good reason for that;
every now and again, we need a desert experience.
The
desert. The 40 days. The first Lent. The ’tween time after the wintry hidden
life of Jesus and before his breathtaking journey to Jerusalem. It was for
Jesus a season of increasing temptation, with all the tantalizing promises of
that temptation: the guarantee of physical comfort and both worldly and
spiritual power. It is this to which the Church unites herself in Lent: not the
triumph of Resurrection, but the agonizing self-awareness of being in relation
with the Father, yet tempted and tantalized, mocked and derided. Acquiescence
to evil is but a breath away. Trust in God seems unreachable.
The
desert brought new focus and urgency to the ministry of Jesus. From the desert
Jesus emerged with a pure heart and with resolute determination to announce
Good News, no matter the disappointments that lay around him: release to
captives, sight for the blind, liberty to the oppressed. The Kingdom of God is
at hand!
Lent. The
Church unites herself to the mystery of Jesus in the desert.
This long
Lent in the Church is the gripping invitation to a humble, repentant cry to
heaven from a renewed poverty of spirit: to feed us with grace instead of
bread; to give us a servile spirit instead of a thirst for honour; to empty us
of all that keeps us from submissive, receptive, total, surrendering, abject
trust in God’s providence.
Jesus was
not born of a priestly family, never called himself a priest, and never led
Temple worship. His most memorable act in the Temple was to cast out the
cashiers who were corrupting the sanctity of the place and who were concerned
more with the profits of the day than the prophets of old! Jesus seemed to
understand that there was something wrong with the religion of his day or, more
accurately, with the way the leaders of his religion were running things. He
cursed the fig tree, a well-known metaphor for the Temple, when it failed to
produce fruit. He labelled as whitewashed sepulchres those who cited rules and
obligations but showed no compassion or love. He chided those who sought
attention for their piety or made themselves comfortable while ignoring
festering poverty around them.
Angry at
times, critical on occasion, unhesitating in pointing out hypocrisy, Jesus
remained a man of deep faith who never abandoned a religion he knew to have
serious problems. Far from avoiding the Temple, he pointed out to those who
would seize him in the garden that he had taught daily in the Temple precincts.
He never stopped anyone from entering the Temple or fulfilling the demands of
his ancestors’ religion. From an early age we see him going up to Jerusalem for
high holy days and feasts. He held to his faith, despite the worldliness,
political surrender and the tepid faith and legalism of its leaders.
There is
a reason for his actions: He himself was the authentic Temple, the dwelling
place of God in our midst. As the prophets had looked forward to the moment
when nations would stream to the Temple mount, Jesus promised that he would
draw all men to himself.
Jesus
emerged from the desert with an urgent message and with actions behind his
words: teaching, healing, feeding, reproving sinners and comforting the
afflicted. When Lent ended, he walked out of the desert and into the waters of
John’s baptism, announced that the Spirit of the Lord was upon him, and
confronted the sickness of his ancestral religion and that of the hearts of
people.
This is
indeed a long Lent in a cold winter for the Church. Still it remains, as ever,
the time for us to unite ourselves with the mystery of Jesus in the desert.
And
then, purer and more reliant on grace than on ourselves, to confront evil with
new boldness, announce the Gospel with new urgency, change hearts and enflame
souls. Hearts thus changed will change the world.
But
first, Lent.
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